Many have traveled there over these decades since, some starting or helping the Vietnamese in organizations, especially related to Agent Orange victims needs as well as orphanages even before the U.S. finally created ties to the country, and probably will continue till we're all to old or gone.
April 28, 2012 - Michael Marceau didn’t leave Vietnam under the best of circumstances in May 1970.Stationed about 30 miles from the Cambodia border in an infantry unit, he “zigged instead of zagged” during an early morning rocket attack and was hit by shrapnel. The metal entered his back, hit a lung, bounced off a rib and lodged in an artery and cluster of nerves in his left shoulder.
A buddy hoisted him into an idling jeep and saved him from bleeding to death. He was hospitalized two weeks, then spent months in rehab.
This month, Marceau, 63, came back to the country where he once served.
“I want to try to make a better exit this time,” Marceau joked as he strolled through the grounds around the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum.
Marceau is one of nine vets who are taking part in the first Veterans for Peace Tour. The 14-day tour was arranged by the only international chapter of Veterans for Peace, which was established several years ago by a handful of vets who’ve made Vietnam their home over the past 20 years. read more>>>
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